The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insuranceplain-crane-443

Driver with fake insurance plowed into 6 parked cars on my block — now what?

So this happened about two weeks ago and I'm still kind of in shock about the whole thing.

Sometime around 3 AM on a Tuesday, a guy lost control and just... bulldozed through a row of cars parked along my street. Six cars total. Mine was third in the chain. I was asleep, heard this horrifying crash, looked out my window and my little hatchback — totally paid off, nothing fancy but mine — had a crushed rear end and a busted axle.

Cops showed up, got the guy's info, didn't cite him for anything (still baffled by that), and basically told us to sort it out with insurance. Cool, thanks officers.

Here's where it gets fun. I called the number on the insurance card he gave police and the rep told me his policy had lapsed four months ago. So he handed over a card for coverage that doesn't exist anymore.

Now I'm stuck. I have liability-only on my own policy — no uninsured motorist, no collision. I was trying to keep my premiums low and honestly never thought about this scenario. I feel pretty foolish but here we are.

The responding officer mentioned small claims court as an option. I've never sued anyone in my life and the idea honestly stresses me out. But I also can't just absorb this loss — I need my car to get to work and I can't exactly snap my fingers and buy another one.

Has anyone actually gone the small claims route in a situation like this? Did it get you anywhere, or does it only work if the person actually has money to pay a judgment? And is there anything else I might be missing here? I feel like I'm running out of options fast.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    spry-wolf-292

    Before you assume you have zero options with your own insurer, call them and ask specifically about any medical payments coverage or other add-ons you might have forgotten about. Also double-check your declarations page yourself — don't just take a phone rep's word for it. Sometimes people have more coverage than they realize, and sometimes adjusters are weirdly quick to tell you there's nothing they can do.

    • 0
      calm-rider152

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 16
    steady-sparrow-868

    Worked claims for years. A few things worth knowing: first, that lapsed insurance card is actually a bigger deal than the officer made it sound — depending on your state, presenting a false proof of insurance can be a separate offense worth reporting to the DMV or your state's insurance commissioner. That paper trail can matter later. Second, file a formal complaint with the insurance company he used to have anyway. It creates a record and sometimes shakes things loose. Probably won't get you a payout but it's worth the 20 minutes.

    • 15
      spry-stoat-627

      Small claims is honestly more accessible than people think. You don't need a lawyer, filing fees are usually pretty low, and the process is designed for regular people. The key thing to do before you file is try to figure out what assets this person actually has — property records, whether they own a business, etc. A judgment against someone with zero collectible assets is just a piece of paper. That said, judgments can often be renewed and can attach to future assets, so it's not totally hopeless even if he's broke right now. Not legal advice, just process context.

    • 7
      silent-newt-903

      File in small claims, document everything obsessively, and simultaneously report the fake insurance card to your state's DMV. Do both this week, not next month. The longer you wait the harder it gets to track this guy down and the more witnesses forget details. Also get written statements from the other five car owners if you can — shared documentation strengthens everyone's position.

    • 11
      brave-stoat-723

      This is so stressful and honestly so unfair. You did everything right — you had insurance, your car was paid off, you were just sleeping. I really hope you find a path forward. Rooting for you.

    • 8
      restless-co-pilot845

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 15
    spry-raven-469

    Are you physically okay? Sometimes the adrenaline and stress of dealing with the insurance nightmare masks the fact that you were affected even in a parked-car situation — whiplash from a secondary impact isn't unheard of even when you weren't inside the vehicle. If you have any neck stiffness or headaches, please see someone. Don't let the property damage drama distract you from making sure you're alright.

  • 7
    keen-stoat-985

    Ugh, I went through almost the exact same thing a couple years back. Uninsured driver, parked car, no UM coverage on my end. I did eventually take the guy to small claims and I won — got a judgment in my favor no problem. The brutal reality though is that collecting on it was another story entirely. He had no real assets and kept dodging. I'd still do it again just to have the legal record, but go in with realistic expectations about whether you'll actually see the money quickly.

  • 7
    cool-swan-896

    Worth a quick consult with a PI attorney before you decide on small claims — some will do a free call. Depending on your state there may be options like your state's uninsured motorist fund or other remedies you haven't heard of. Not legal advice, and every situation is different, but small claims isn't your only path necessarily.

    • 1
      calm-driver350

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 6
    quiet-seal-704

    Did the police report actually document that he presented a lapsed insurance card, or did they just take it at face value and move on? That detail matters a lot. If the report just lists his old policy number as valid coverage, you may have to do legwork to get the record corrected, and that affects your options down the line.